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Polygenic and multifactorial scores for pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma risk prediction

Authors :
Galeotti, Alice Alessandra Gentiluomo, Manuel Rizzato, Cosmeri and Obazee, Ofure Neoptolemos, John P. Pasquali, Claudio and Nentwich, Michael Cavestro, Giulia Martina Pezzilli, Raffaele and Greenhalf, William Holleczek, Bernd Schroeder, Cornelia and Schottker, Ben Ivanauskas, Audrius Ginocchi, Laura Key, Timothy J. Hegyi, Peter Archibugi, Livia Darvasi, Erika and Basso, Daniela Sperti, Cosimo Bijlsma, Maarten F. Palmieri, Orazio Hlavac, Viktor Talar-Wojnarowska, Renata and Mohelnikova-Duchonova, Beatrice Hackert, Thilo Vashist, Yogesh and Strouhal, Ondrej van Laarhoven, Hanneke Tavano, Francesca and Lovecek, Martin Dervenis, Christos Izbeki, Ferenc and Padoan, Andrea Malecka-Panas, Ewa Maiello, Evaristo Vanella, Giuseppe Capurso, Gabriele Izbicki, Jakob R. Theodoropoulos, George E. Jamroziak, Krzysztof Katzke, Verena Kaaks, Rudolf and Mambrini, Andrea Papanikolaou, Ioannis S. Szmola, Richard and Szentesi, Andrea Kupcinskas, Juozas Bursi, Simona and Costello, Eithne Boggi, Ugo Milanetto, Anna Caterina Landi, Stefano Gazouli, Maria Vodickova, Ludmila Soucek, Pavel and Gioffreda, Domenica Gemignani, Federica Brenner, Hermann and Strobel, Oliver Buechler, Markus Vodicka, Pavel Paiella, Salvatore Canzian, Federico Campa, Daniele
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Background Most cases of pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) are asymptomatic in early stages, and the disease is typically diagnosed in advanced phases, resulting in very high mortality. Tools to identify individuals at high risk of developing PDAC would be useful to improve chances of early detection. Objective We generated a polygenic risk score (PRS) for PDAC risk prediction, combining the effect of known risk SNPs, and carried out an exploratory analysis of a multifactorial score. Methods We tested the associations of the individual known risk SNPs on up to 2851 PDAC cases and 4810 controls of European origin from the PANcreatic Disease ReseArch (PANDoRA) consortium. Thirty risk SNPs were included in a PRS, which was computed on the subset of subjects that had 100% call rate, consisting of 839 cases and 2040 controls in PANDoRA and 6420 cases and 4889 controls from the previously published Pancreatic Cancer Cohort Consortium I-III and Pancreatic Cancer Case-Control Consortium genome-wide association studies. Additional exploratory multifactorial scores were constructed by complementing the genetic score with smoking and diabetes. Results The scores were associated with increased PDAC risk and reached high statistical significance (OR=2.70, 95% CI 1.99 to 3.68, p=2.54x10(-10) highest vs lowest quintile of the weighted PRS, and OR=14.37, 95% CI 5.57 to 37.09, p=3.64x10(-8), highest vs lowest quintile of the weighted multifactorial score). Conclusion We found a highly significant association between a PRS and PDAC risk, which explains more than individual SNPs and is a step forward in the direction of the construction of a tool for risk stratification in the population.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.od......2127..94835b33f5e6235b486442bbdce754d2